Re: Prox's Naming Dreams
Posted: Fri May 14, 2021 9:09 pm
(Softly Spoken: naming event)
The third fall of snow in the winter of his second year is heavy and thick. His fur stands out sharply against stark white, and his tribemates don't bother bringing him along on hunts where stealth is a necessity. He gathers, and does not complain, because as long as he is useful he eats. He eats more mosses than meat, but it is food.
He is pulling sticks from a stunted tree in the southwestern valley when he hears the voices. A hunting party, arguing; about what, he can't tell, but the dispute is growing heated, their voices rising, beginning to echo off the rock faces. He looks up, spots the group where they stand beneath a bluff. Far above them hangs a curling wave of wind-sculpted snow. Even as he watches, a scatter of clumps flakes from the crest and blows away in the wind.
Calling out would be unwise. He simply drops his burden and moves towards them as quickly as he can without floundering and falling. As he reaches them, they go briefly quiet, startled into silence by his sudden interruption. "Softly!" he hisses, and tosses his head, pointing with his muzzle at the precarious ridge of snow overhead. "Your argument is not worth your lives!"
They pick their way out into the open and away with silent caution. As the group reaches the pass, a low sound alerts them; they turn back to watch the collapse, the cascading avalanche that would have buried them alive had they stayed longer or shouted it down onto their heads.
The third fall of snow in the winter of his second year is heavy and thick. His fur stands out sharply against stark white, and his tribemates don't bother bringing him along on hunts where stealth is a necessity. He gathers, and does not complain, because as long as he is useful he eats. He eats more mosses than meat, but it is food.
He is pulling sticks from a stunted tree in the southwestern valley when he hears the voices. A hunting party, arguing; about what, he can't tell, but the dispute is growing heated, their voices rising, beginning to echo off the rock faces. He looks up, spots the group where they stand beneath a bluff. Far above them hangs a curling wave of wind-sculpted snow. Even as he watches, a scatter of clumps flakes from the crest and blows away in the wind.
Calling out would be unwise. He simply drops his burden and moves towards them as quickly as he can without floundering and falling. As he reaches them, they go briefly quiet, startled into silence by his sudden interruption. "Softly!" he hisses, and tosses his head, pointing with his muzzle at the precarious ridge of snow overhead. "Your argument is not worth your lives!"
They pick their way out into the open and away with silent caution. As the group reaches the pass, a low sound alerts them; they turn back to watch the collapse, the cascading avalanche that would have buried them alive had they stayed longer or shouted it down onto their heads.